The Netherlands wasn’t always on our radar as a study destination. Twenty years ago at Times Consultant, inquiries about Dutch universities were rare, maybe ten or fifteen families per year. Now we handle dozens monthly, and the reasons are straightforward: the Dutch figured out how to teach international students in English without compromising quality, charge tuition that’s high but not extortionate, and actually want graduates to stay and work after finishing their degrees.
What changed? The Netherlands invested heavily in internationalizing its universities starting in the early 2000s. They didn’t just translate a few courses but they redesigned entire programs to accommodate international students, hired faculty who could teach in English, and built support systems that work. The result is over 2,000 English-taught programs across bachelor’s, master’s, and PhD levels in a country smaller than Punjab.
What our students consistently mention after arriving? How organized everything feels. The Netherlands runs efficiently such as trains depart on time, university administration responds to emails within days, visa processes follow clear timelines. After dealing with unpredictable bureaucracy in other countries, students find the Dutch systems almost suspiciously straightforward. That reliability matters when you’re thousands of kilometers from home trying to navigate a foreign education system.